| Literature DB >> 31947974 |
Elise De Bleser1,2, Ruben Willems3, Karel Decaestecker1,2, Lieven Annemans3, Aurélie De Bruycker4, Valérie Fonteyne2,4, Nicolaas Lumen1,2, Filip Ameye5, Ignace Billiet6, Steven Joniau7, Gert De Meerleer2,8,9, Piet Ost2,4,10, Renée Bultijnck2,4,10.
Abstract
The optimal management of patients with oligorecurrent prostate cancer (PCa) is unknown. There is growing interest in metastasis-directed therapy (MDT) for this population. The objective was to assess cost-utility from a Belgian healthcare payer's perspective of MDT and delayed androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) in comparison with surveillance and delayed ADT, and with immediate ADT. A Markov decision-analytic trial-based model was developed, projecting the results over a 5-year time horizon with one-month cycles. Clinical data were derived from the STOMP trial and literature. Treatment costs were derived from official government documents. Probabilistic sensitivity analyses showed that MDT is cost-effective compared to surveillance (ICER: €8393/quality adjusted life year (QALY)) and immediate ADT (dominant strategy). The ICER is most sensitive to utilities in the different health states and the first month MDT cost. At a willingness-to-pay threshold of €40,000 per QALY, the cost of the first month MDT should not exceed €8136 to be cost-effective compared to surveillance. The Markov-model suggests that MDT for oligorecurrent PCa is potentially cost-effective in comparison with surveillance and delayed ADT, and in comparison with immediate ADT.Entities:
Keywords: cost-effective; cost-utility analysis; markov model; metastasis-directed therapy; oligometastasis; oligorecurrent; prostate cancer; prostatic neoplasms
Year: 2020 PMID: 31947974 PMCID: PMC7016808 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12010132
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Probabilistic sensitivity analysis-cost-effectiveness acceptability curve. Please remark that the patients in the different groups (i.e., MDT, surveillance and ADT) entered different health states during follow-up and thus the corresponding costs and utilities of that health state were applied. Abbreviations CEAC: Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve; MDT: Metastasis-directed therapy.
Figure 2Graphic representation of 10,000 simulations of the cost-utility analysis of MDT versus surveillance. Every dot represents a simulation of the cost-utility analysis. The red line represents the WTP threshold. The red dot represents the mean ICER. Differences are calculated as MDT minus surveillance/ADT. (A) Cost-utility plane of MDT versus surveillance. (B) Cost-utility plane of MDT versus ADT. Please remark the different scales in Figure 1A,B. Abbreviations; MDT: Metastasis-directed therapy; QALY: Quality adjusted life years; WTP: Willingness-to-pay.
Figure 3Multiple cost-effectiveness acceptability curve. This curve shows the most cost-effective strategy depending on the willingness-to-pay threshold. Please remark that the patients in the different groups (i.e., MDT, surveillance and ADT) entered different health states during follow-up and thus the corresponding costs and utilities of that health state were applied. ADT: Androgen-deprivation therapy; MDT: Metastasis-directed therapy.
Figure 4One-way sensitivity analysis—tornado diagram. Tornado model showing the impact of the different variables on the ICER. In this figure, all sensitivity scores were set at 100%. The figure depicts the impact on the ICER when the sensitivity score ranges from 80% to 120%. ADT: Androgen-deprivation therapy; MDT: Metastasis-directed therapy.
General overview of the model input variables.
| Inputparameter | Deterministic Value | Standard Error | Distribution | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age (years) | 68.15 | NA | NA | [ |
| Discount rate costs (%) | 3% | NA | NA | [ |
| Discount rate utilities (%) | 1.5% | NA | NA | [ |
| Disease-related probabilities (%) | ||||
| ADT-free survival in MDT | 6 months: 94% | NA | NA | [ |
| 12 months: 67% | ||||
| 18 months: 46% | ||||
| 24 months: 46% | ||||
| ADT-free survival in surveillance | 6 months: 85% | NA | NA | [ |
| 12 months: 56% | ||||
| 18 months: 32% | ||||
| 24 months: 23% | ||||
| Transition to CRPC state from ADT state | 6 months: 1% | NA | NA | [ |
| 12 months: 7% | ||||
| 18 months: 12% | ||||
| 24 months: 20% | ||||
| 30 months: 26% | ||||
| 36 months: 28% | ||||
| 42 months: 32% | ||||
| 48 months: 35% | ||||
| Mortality risk | ||||
| Death from other causes | 68 year: 0.018123 | NA | NA | [ |
| 69 year 0.019817 | ||||
| 70 years: 0.020578 | ||||
| 71 years 0.023583 | ||||
| 72 years 0.026009 | ||||
| PCa death in CPRC state | 5.7143% | NA | NA | [ |
| MDT during the first month | 0.72 | 0.17 | Beta | [ |
| ADT-free state | 0.92 | 0.23 | Beta | [ |
| ADT state | 0.78 | 0.19 | Beta | [ |
| CRPC state (chemotherapy accounted for 30% in this state) | 0.6 | 0.15 | Beta | [ |
|
| ||||
| MDT cost month 1 (ADT-free state) | 4549 | 1137 | Gamma | [ |
| MDT cost other months (ADT-free state) | 47 | 12 | Gamma | [ |
| Surveillance cost month 1 (ADT-free state) | 865 | 216.3 | Gamma | [ |
| Surveillance cost other months (ADT free state) | 17 | 4.4 | Gamma | [ |
| Cost diagnostics and start ADT (ADT state) | 1266 | 317 | Gamma | [ |
| Cost ADT in follow-up months ADT (ADT state) | 298 | 74.7 | Gamma | [ |
| CRPC costs (combination of diagnostics, treatment and follow-up) (distribution of abiraterone acetate 35%, enzalutamide 35% and docetaxel 30%) | 775 | 193 | Gamma | [ |
| ADT toxicities probabilities | ||||
| Gynecomastia | 13% | NA | Beta | [ |
| Osteoporosis | 10% | NA | Beta | [ |
| Diabetes | 9% | NA | Beta | [ |
| Fatigue | 80% | NA | Beta | [ |
| Sexual dysfunction | 95% | NA | Beta | [ |
| Reduced penile/testis size | 93% | NA | Beta | [ |
| Hot flashes | 80% | NA | Beta | [ |
| Cognitive changes | 48% | NA | Beta | [ |
| Anemia | 13% | NA | Beta | [ |
| Metabolic syndrome | 55% | NA | Beta | [ |
| MDT toxicities probabilities | ||||
| Lymph oedema | 0.4% | 0.001 | Beta | [ |
| Anemia needing blood transfusion | 0.2% | 0.0005 | Beta | [ |
| Symptomatic lymphocoele | 5% | 0.0125 | Beta | [ |
| Neuropraxia | 0.4% | 0.001 | Beta | [ |
| Pain | 1% | 0.0025 | Beta | Expert opinion |
| Diarrhea | 4% | 0.01 | Beta | [ |
* An average utility per health state (and thus treatment) was used, rather than a disutility per possible side effect. ADT: Androgen-deprivation therapy; CRPC: Castration-resistant prostate cancer; MDT: Metastasis-directed therapy; NA: Not applicable; PCa: Prostate cancer.
Figure 5Scenario analyses. (A) Overall overview of the cost-utility of MDT versus surveillance or MDT versus ADT in function of the cost of MDT during the first month. (B) Overall overview of the cost-utility of MDT versus Surveillance or MDT versus ADT in function of the cost of MDT for SBRT. ADT: Androgen-deprivation therapy; ICER: Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; MDT: Metastasis-directed therapy; SBRT: Stereotactic body radiotherapy.
Figure 6Scenario analysis investigating ICER in function of the effect of MDT versus surveillance. 100% is the effect as it was observed in the STOMP trial (orange dot). As seen in the figure, the ICER becomes higher when the difference in the effect of MDT versus surveillance becomes smaller. ICER: Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; MDT: Metastasis-directed therapy.
Figure A1Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve of MDT versus surveillance. In order to evaluate the uncertainty of the input variables, the standard error of the mean was varied: mean * magnitude, with magnitude 0.05, 0.1, 0.15, 0.20, and 0.25. The results were robust, with MDT versus surveillance being cost-effective at a willingness-to-pay threshold of 40,000 euro in respectively 98%, 90.7%, 85.9%, 87.6%, and 86.2% of the iterations. MDT: Metastasis-directed therapy.
Figure 7Markov model summarizing the state transitions (simplified model). Patients treated by MDT or surveillance enter the Markov model in the ADT-free state. Patients that are treated with immediate ADT enter the Markov model in the ADT state. Circles represents the different health states in the model. Arrows represent transitions between health states, Patients are at each health state at risk for developing side effects. ADT: Androgen-deprivation therapy; CRPC: Castration-resistant prostate cancer; MDT: Metastasis-directed therapy.
Detailed overview of the cost.
| Cost | Specification | Cost Estimates (€) |
|---|---|---|
| Cost at diagnosis | Imaging (choline PET CT, MR soft tissue and MR total spine), consultation, laboratory monitoring and multidisciplinary oncological consultation (MOC) | Choline PET-CT: 747.72 |
| Initial treatment-SBRT | Physician fees, CT-simulation, planning, treatment, drugs, laboratory monitoring (with calculated possibility of new SBRT round) | SBRT: 3782.24 |
| Initial treatment-ADT | We investigated the different sorts of ADT (Luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH)- agonist and antagonist), taken into account the frequency of injection, the associated consultation, etc. and decided to use the drug associated with the lowest cost | Range of costs of different ADT: 63.40–141.5 per month |
| Initial treatment-surgery | Physician fees, anesthetic drugs, hospital admission, medication and laboratory monitoring | Robot-assisted PLND: 3109.35 |
| Cost of surveillance group | Diagnostics cost, follow-up visit and laboratory monitoring | Choline PET-CT: 747.72 |
| Treatment CRPC state | Diagnostics costs (imaging, consultation, laboratory and MOC), three possible treatment strategies (abiraterone acetate (AA), enzalutamide and docetaxel *), monitoring costs depending on the treatment. | CRPC first month inclusive diagnostic costs and ADT: 1165.76 |
Costs are expressed in Euro (€) and were extracted in 2018 [20,21] * Based on expert opinion, distribution of the treatments was respectively set at 35, 35 and 30%. AA: abiraterone acetate; ADT: Androgen-deprivation therapy; CRPC: Castration-resistant prostate cancer; MDT: Metastasis-directed therapy; NA: Not applicable; PCa: Prostate cancer; QALY: Quality-adjusted life years.